Arthur Rackham · Fairy tales

The Arthur Rackham Fairy Book, George G. Harrap, published 1933 | src Bonhams UK
Irish Fairy Tales by James Stephens, with colour plates by Arthur Rackham, Macmillan, published 1920 | src Bonhams UK

You could spend hours marveling at Arthur Rackham’s work. The legendary illustrator, born on September 19, 1867, was incredibly prolific, and his interpretations of Peter Pan, The Wind in the Willows, Grimm’s Fairy Tales, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and Rip Van Winkle (to name but a few) have helped create our collective idea of those stories.
Rackham is perhaps the most famous of the group of artists who defined the Golden Age of Illustration, the early twentieth-century period in which technical innovations allowed for better printing and people still had the money to spend on fancy editions. Although Rackham had to spend the early years of his career doing what he called “much distasteful hack work,” he was famous—and even collected—in his own time. He married the artist Edith Starkie in 1900, and she apparently helped him develop his signature watercolor technique. From the publication of his Rip Van Winkle in 1905, his talents were always in high demand.
He had the advantage of a canny publisher, too, in William Heinemann. Before the release of each book, Rackham would exhibit the original illustrations at London’s Leicester Galleries, and sell many of the paintings. Meanwhile, Heinnemann had the notion to corner multiple markets by releasing both clothbound trade books and small numbers of signed, expensively bound, gilt-edged collectors’ editions. When the British economy flagged, Rackham turned his attention to Americans, producing illustrations for Washington Irving’s The Legend of Sleepy Hollow and later Poe’s Tales of Mystery and Imagination.

Pragmatic he may have been, but Rackham’s detailed work is pure fantasy, alternately beautiful, romantic, haunting, and sinister. Nothing he did was ever truly ugly, although he could certainly communicate the grotesque. And his illustrations are never cute, although his animals—as in The Wind in the Willows—have a naturalist’s vividness, and he could do whimsy (think Alice in Wonderland, or his many goblins) with the best of them. Several generations of children grew up with this nuanced beauty; it’s probably wielded even more of an aesthetic influence than we attribute to it.

Rackham once said, “Like the sundial, my paint box counts no hours but sunny ones.” This is peculiar when one considers the moodiness of much of his palate, and the unflinching darkness of many of his illustrations. I think, rather, of a quote from his edition of Brothers Grimm: “Evil is also not anything small or close to home, and not the worst; otherwise one could grow accustomed to it.” He made that evil beautiful, too, and it was this as much as anything that enchanted. By Sadie Stein for The Paris Review Blog

Blossoming cactus 1930s

Hans Grendahl (1877-1962) ~ Cactus flowers. Close-up, June, 1937. Autochrome. Stereo. | src Preus museum
Hans Grendahl (1877-1962) ~ Kaktusblomster. Nærbilde, June, 1937. Autochrome. Stereo. | src Preus museum
Hans Grendahl (1877-1962) ~ Blossoming cactus, July, 1934. Autochrome. Stereo photograph. | src Preus museum
Hans Grendahl (1877-1962) ~ Blomstrende kaktus, July, 1934. Autochrome. Stereo photograph. | src Preus museum
Hans Grendahl (1877-1962) ~ Blossoming cactus, July, 1937. Autochrome. Stereo photograph. | src Preus museum
Hans Grendahl (1877-1962) ~ Blomstrende kaktus, July, 1937. Autochrome. Stereo photograph. | src Preus museum

About Hans Grendahl (1877 – 1962)

Born in Rennebu. Son of farmer Ole Knudsen Grendahl and Ane Hansdatter, born Aas. He graduated in architecture with architect Solberg, Trondheim, in 1902, after which he went to Germany and studied architecture at the university in Karlsruhe. After completing his education, Grendahl was employed, among others in the company Jacob Digre in Ålesund, later he became an assistant teacher in building subjects, construction and freehand drawing at Trondhjem’s technical training institute. In 1916 he was employed as a teacher at NTH. In the 1920s and 30s took a number of photographs in color (Autochromes), i.a. interiors and exteriors of churches in Trøndelag, Gudbrandsdalen, Østerdalen, Møre and Romsdal and Telemark, as well as pictures from the Trøndelag exhibition in 1930 and the Drammen exhibition in the same year. The oldest color photo taken in his collection is from 1922. Grendahl left a unique archive of stereo images, about half of which are in colour, to his daughter Adelheide (Ada) Grue, in Stjørdal. The picture collection was bought by the Preus Fotomuseum in 1989 and digitalized in December 2021. It consists of 1017 photographs on glass plates in the format 90×140 mm. With a few exceptions, the images are stereo images.

quoted from Preus Fotomuseum

Hans Grendahl (1877-1957) ~ White cactus, July, 1935. Autochrome. Stereo photograph. | src Preus museum
Hans Grendahl (1877-1957) ~ Hvit kaktus, July, 1935. Autochrome. Stereo photograph. | src Preus museum

Frau von Heute · Fleischmann

Trude Fleischmann (1895–1990) ~ Marianne Rosenberg, Vienna, 1931 | Ostlicht Spring 2023 Photo Auction
Trude Fleischmann (1895–1990) ~ Marianne Rosenberg, Vienna, 1931 | Detail

Photographer’s stamp with address at “Wien I. Ebendorferstraße 3”, her copyright stamp and her re-order stamp with handwritten negative no. “1039/a” in ink, “Wiener Foto-Kurier” agency stamp, several numbers and handwritten annotated “Frl. Marianne Rosenberg” in pencil on the reverse. LITERATURE “Die junge Frau von Heute”, in: Die Bühne, no. 299, March 1931, Vienna, p. 5 (titled “Fräulein Maria Rosenberg”); Frauke Kreutler, Anton Holzer (eds.), Trude Fleischmann. Der selbstbewusste Blick, cat. Wien Museum, Vienna 2013, p. 127 (ill. from “Die Bühne”).

«Die junge Frau von Heute». Fräulein Maria Rosenberg. Die Bühne, no. 299, March 1931, p. 5
«Die junge Frau von Heute» Die Bühne, no. 299, March 1931, p. 6
«Die junge Frau von Heute» Die Bühne, no. 299, March 1931, p. 7
Elisabeth Martin, die Gattin des Direktors der Berliner Volksbühne Karl Heinz Martin. Die Bühne, 299, März 1931
Hanne Wassermann, die bekannte Wiener Gymnastiklehrerin. Die Bühne, 299, März 1931

Steichen’s Delphiniums, late 1930s

Edward Steichen ~ Delphiniums, Ridgefield, Connecticut, 1939; printed 1940. Dye transfer photograph. | src NGV
Edward Steichen ~ Block of blue wave delphiniums at Steichen’s plant breeding farm, 1938 | NGV ~ National Gallery of Victoria
Edward Steichen (American, b. Luxembourg, 1879–1973) ~ Delphiniums, ca. 1940. Dye imbibition print. | Eastman museum

Edward Steichen: painter, photographer, modern art promoter, museum curator, exhibition creator—and delphinium breeder.

Yes, in addition to his groundbreaking career as a visual artist and museum professional, Steichen was also a renowned horticulturist. While he lived in France, the French Horticultural Society awarded him its gold medal in 1913, and he served as president of the American Delphinium Society from 1935 to 1939. In the early 1930s, after leaving his position as chief of photography for the Condé Nast publications—including Vogue and Vanity Fair—and more than 10 years before beginning his career as Director of the Department of Photography at MoMA, he retired to his Connecticut farm to raise flowers.

Among the delphinium breeds Steichen hybridized there were “Carl Sandburg,” named for his brother-in-law and close friend (and Nobel Prize–winning poet and author), and, in the 1960s, “Connecticut Yankees”…

In June 1936, MoMA presented its first and only dedicated flower show, Edward Steichen’s Delphiniums, which exhibited—for one week only—plants Steichen had raised and then trucked to the Museum’s galleries himself. (Read the original press release for the exhibition in MoMA’s online press archives.)

quoted from MoMA blog

Edward Steichen with delphiniums (ca. 1938), Umpawaug House (Redding, Connecticut). Photo by Dana Steichen. Gelatin silver print. Edward Steichen Archive, VII. The Museum of Modern Art Archives. | MoMA blog

Puck der Waldgeist

PUCK der Waldgeist nennt diese junge fantasiebegabte Tänzerin diesen grotesken Tanz, ein paar Kastanien- blätter sind die Dekoration Foto: Illpho-Dillan 2. Das Kleine Magazin 1940 Band 16 Heft 34
PUCK the forest spirit is what this young, imaginative dancer calls this grotesque dance, a few chestnut leaves are the decoration Photo: Illpho-Dillan 2. Published in Das Kleine Magazin, 1940

Märzbecher von Walter Möbius

Walter Möbius :: Märzenbecher (Leucojum vernum) im Polenztal, Sächsische Schweiz, 1929 | src Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek
Walter Möbius :: Märzenbecher (Leucojum vernum) im Polenztal, Sächsische Schweiz, 1929 | src Deutsche Fotothek
Walter Möbius :: Frühlingsknotenblume (Leucojum vernum), auch Märzenbecher, Märzbecher, Märzglöckchen oder Großes Schneeglöckchen genannt, im Polenztal, um 1935 | src Deutsche Fotothek
Walter Möbius :: Frühlingsknotenblume (Leucojum vernum), auch Märzenbecher, Märzbecher, Märzglöckchen oder Großes Schneeglöckchen genannt, im Polenztal, um 1935 | src Deutsche Fotothek
Walter Möbius :: Märzenbecher (Leucojum vernum) im Polenztal, Sächsische Schweiz, 1929 | src Deutsche Fotothek

Pike dive, 1933

The Scissor Dive. Press Photograph, 1933 / The Classic Photo Fair London 2023
«The Scissor Dive» (sic). Press Photograph, 1933 | src The Classic Photo Fair London 2023 via ODLP ~ l’œil de la photographie

Adams Dogwood Blossoms

Ansel Adams (1902 – 1984) :: Plate XI: Dogwood Blossoms, 1938. Portfolio III: Yosemite Valley. San Francisco: Sierra Club, 1960. 16 gelatin silver prints; each signed. | src Christie’s
Ansel Adams (1902 – 1984) :: ‘Dogwood Blossoms, Yosemite’, ferrotyped gelatin silver print, mounted, signed in pencil on the mount, titled on the reverse, circa 1938, probably printed later. | src Sotheby’s
Ansel Adams (1902 – 1984) :: ‘Dogwood Blossoms, Yosemite’, ferrotyped gelatin silver print, ca. 1938 | src Sotheby’s